The showcase of a florist from Orchid plants and flowers immediately brings us to beautiful exotic places, the destination of extraordinary, adventurous journeys: and in fact the vast majority of
Orchids lives in the tropical and subtropical areas of Central and South America and Asia, but there are also species that thrive in temperate areas and even in the cold ones north of the Arctic
Circle and in Patagonia, near Antarctica.

They have therefore adapted to all kinds of habitat, excluding deserts and glaciers.

Even walking in our fields an attentive eye and a little knowledgeable can find some small minutes not so flasshy like relatives of tropical areas but still odd and bizarre shapes.

It is generally thought that cultivating orchids is very difficult, but in fact this myth can be easily disassociated: the secret is to know the areas of origin of the chosen varieties and try to
recreate the conditions in the greenhouse or in the apartment. So it will be easy to see flourish repeatedly for years the lovely Phalenopsis in the rooms of our apartments, or the
Lady’s-slipper or Cymbidium on our balconies and terraces, or the Cattleye with their colorful flowers in the partially shaded and damp areas of our home.

They are plants that live with little, since many species, especially those from tropical areas, live clinging to tree trunks or rocks, without any substrate, and simply nourish the humidity of
the environment, which they absorb through long aerial roots so that they can never be cut because they are an essential and vital part of the plant: to see them thrive it will
suffice to spray the water on the leaves several times a day. Varieties that grow in temperate or cold areas have a kind of underground pseudobulbs and require a constant but not excessive
moisture of the substrate, consisting of bark bark pieces.